India has taken a major step toward modernising highway travel with the launch of its first stop-free toll collection system at the Choryasi toll plaza on the Surat–Bharuch highway, introducing a barrier-free model aimed at reducing congestion and improving traffic flow.
The new system eliminates the need for vehicles to halt at toll booths, allowing seamless passage through the plaza using automated digital tolling technology. The initiative is part of broader efforts by transport authorities to integrate smart infrastructure into India’s expanding national highway network.
The Choryasi toll plaza, located on a key stretch of the Surat–Bharuch corridor in Gujarat, has long experienced heavy vehicular traffic, particularly from freight carriers and intercity commuters. The introduction of the stop-free system is expected to significantly cut waiting times, reduce fuel consumption, and improve overall travel efficiency on the route.
Under the new mechanism, toll charges are automatically deducted as vehicles pass through designated detection zones, removing the need for physical stopping or manual payment. Officials say the system is designed to improve compliance while also enhancing road safety by minimising abrupt braking and lane congestion at toll points.
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The project aligns with India’s broader push toward digitalisation in transport infrastructure, including wider adoption of electronic toll collection systems and satellite-based tracking technologies under national highway modernisation programmes. Authorities have indicated that successful implementation at Choryasi could pave the way for similar systems across other high-traffic corridors in the country.
Transport officials and highway developers have described the launch as a significant milestone in reducing bottlenecks on major freight and passenger routes. The system is also expected to support faster logistics movement between industrial hubs in Gujarat, which is one of India’s key manufacturing and export regions.
If expanded nationwide, the stop-free toll model could reshape highway travel in India by reducing delays, improving fuel efficiency, and streamlining toll operations, marking a shift toward fully automated road infrastructure management.
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